Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 57, Number 18, Decatur, Adams County, 22 January 1959 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
Report Effort At Change On Rackets Group Report Democrats Seeking Majority For Rackets Probe WASHINGTON (UPD—A group of Democratic senators was reported today to be plotting to
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dump some Republican members of the bipartisan Senate Rackets Committee. The committee—now composed of four Democrats and four Republicans — met behind closed doors to discuss the reports. Sen. Karl E. Mundt iR-S. D:T. ranking Republican on the group, has told GOP senators that some Democrats have launched a backstage drive to give their party a majority on the committee. An aide said Chairman John L. 1 McClellan ID - Ark.) had heard i similar rumors. McClellan, however, was sajd to want to retain i the current committee lineup. Mundt said he believed organ- 1 ized jdbor inspired the move to • oust some GOP members. He said I he believed it would be put for- :
ward when McClellan asks the Senate to extend the committee’s life for another year. In another labor development. Chairman Graham A. Barden (DN. C.) of the House Labor Committee predicted the House would pass a strong anti - racketeering measure. "Not only the public but union members are entitled to it,” he said. The House killed the Senatepassed Kennedy-Ives labor reform bill last year. Barden voted against it. „ ■ * Meantime, President Eisenhower's save-the - cash $1,350,000,000 six - year housing program ran head-on into Democrat demands for a bigger outlay. New federal housing administrator Norman P. Mason outlined the President’s
TBK DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
F plan at the opening session M i hearings by the Senate housing subcommittee. Chairman John Sparkman (D- --. Ala.) said in advance he expected . the Senate to okay a measure I more along the lines of his $2,- : 100,000,000 six-year scheme. Anothl er Democrat, Sen. Joseph S. ■ Clark (Pa.), assailed the* President’s plan as "completely inade- . quate” and plugged for his own i 6-biil|on-dollar 10-year program. I The President’s cabinet was said to be split on another part • of his legislative program — his I forthcoming civil rights bill. Atty, i Gen. William P. Rogers and cabi inet “liberals” want a provision I permitting the Justice Department to fight school segregation, "coni servative” advisers don’t.
I Other congressional news: Draft: 'Die House Armed Services Committee announced it ■ would begin hearings Monday on ; the Eisenhower administration’s request for an extension of the > draft law. Sports: A bill was introduced in the Senate to permit major league baseball clubs to limit telecasts of their games into minor league cities without risking prosecution under the anti-trust laws. Rackets: The Senate Rackets Committee disclosed that govem- , ment doctors would check on the condition of five witnesses who claim they are too ill to attend a "sick call" hearing next week. The committee had notified six ailing witnesses to make themselves available for questioning
next Tuesday, but five sent word they were too ill to testify. Defense: The Senate defense appropriations subcommittee tentatively approved the transfer of IS million dollars in Air Force funds to speed new weapons into use. Names of the new weapons were not disclosed. Carl Luginbill Heads Berne C. Os C. Carl Luginbill, Berne insurance agent, has been' elected president of the Berae Chamber of Commerce. Other officers for 1959 are John Eicher, vide president; Jerome Nussbaufft, secretary, and Richard Lehmart, treasurer.
! Mrs. Robert Zwick, Mrs. Albert Harlow and Miss Iren® Zwick left . Monday for a vacation in Florida. Robert Zwick will join them later. Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Harper left Sunday for a three weeks’ vacation trip to Florida. Mr, and Mrs. Ward Calland returned to Decatur Wednesday evening after a two and one-half • month combination business, and 1 vacation trip through the south ’, and east. They visited with their * daughter Mrs. Charles Camp, and - family,' In Virginia. I Joe Schmith, of Tipton, has been elected cashier of the Citizens National Bank of Tipton, and secretary of the board. He is married to the former Kathy Ann Edwards, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Edwards of Decatur. He joined the bank jn 1953, and has been assistant cashier and head teller since soon after his connections with the firm. A suit to evict the tenant of 30 acres of kand just north of the Mira Heavins ot Deeajur, was authorized to repossess the land and collect S2OO damages, plus legal costs, from William Waldon. Harry Bell, Jr., of Craigville, bought the 80-acre farm of Mr. and Mrs. Harvey E. Foore, five miles north and one and three-fourths miles west of Bluffton, for $12,400 at public auction last Saturday. Everett Neuenschwander, of Bluffton route 4, has been admitted to the Wells county hospital. John Eichhorn has been elected chairman of the Wells county 4-H association. Wilmer J. Gerber, 27, of route 4, was involved in an accident in Wells county Wednesday as the result of the treacherous highway. As Gerber pulled from a driveway on the John Eversole farm, his car was struck by one driven by Raymond E. Stout, 40, of Bluffton. Front bumpers collided as Stout applied his brakes. Damage was estitnated at S2OO for Stout’s car and SIOO for Gerber’s auto, Leland Ripley Taken To Health Institute Leland Ripley, well known insurance man of near Monroe, was taken to the Clinical Center, National Institute at Bethesda, Md. He has been ill fpr several months and is expected to undergo treatment at the institute for approximately three months. f
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THURSDAY, JANUARY 22, lfisd
Shows Daily Democrat Souvenir Os 1924 Henry A. Heimann, of route 4, I in renewing his newspaper sub- : scription, showed a pencil inscribed “1903 Decatur Daily Democrat 1924” which he received th® year , he was married and took out his . first Democrat subscription. Heimann reported he still used . the pencil, which was passed out . on the 21st birthday of the change ' from a weekly newspaper to a f daily. This is the 56th year of pubi, lication as a daily, the 102nd year ■ of publication. Founded as the Del catur Eagle in 1857, the name was changed to the Decatur Democrat ! after a factional battle in the Dem- . ocratic party. I I We Will Do Our Best I To Give The THINKING Man’s Wife [ a Rest! i Available Every Day at FAIRWAY Carry-Out 1 • Baked Beans • Potato Salad • Bean Salad > • Cole Slaw • Com Relish f • Herring, Wine or Oeam Sauce. 'Hearing Expert : Returns to Decatur SONOTONE’S HEARING EXr PERT, Mr. J. M. Friend, of Fort . AVayne. will conduct Sonotone’s ’ regular monthly hearing center at the Rice Hotel, Decatur, this : Saturday, January 24th, from 2:00 c to 5:00 p. m. ’ Anyone who has a hearing problem, or difficulty in understanding* is invited to consult Mr. Friend without charge. Those doing so will be given, in privacy, an audiometric hearing test following medically accepted practices and an . analysis of the individual’s hear- ; ing loss. Investigate the Sonotone plan for better hearing. It employs the ; latest transistor and reseach de- ’ velopments for compensative cor- ’ rection of hearing impairment. - Home consultation Joy appoints ment. Free booklet on request.
